It is with great sadness we announce the passing of our dear Jim, after a valiant battle with cancer. He died peacefully at St. John Hospice, surrounded by loved ones, on November 22nd at the age of 85. He was a much adored husband, father, grandfather, uncle, colleague and friend.
He leaves behind his devoted wife of 63 years, Bev, his children Dayna (Gord) and Marla (Craig), and his grandchildren Madison (Jesse) and Keegan (Shai). As well, his nephews and nieces, Bob, Jim, Sharon, Janice and their families.
Jim was born at St. Paul’s Hospital, and lived his whole life in Vancouver. He grew up in East Vancouver, graduating from Britannia High School in 1957. Many of Jim’s closest friends to this day were friendships formed at Britannia, including his high school sweetheart, and the love of his life, Bev.
At UBC, Jim enrolled in the Faculty of Education, and began a 35 year distinguished teaching career in 1960. He was a teacher and vice-principal in Vancouver, and a principal and member of the district staff in Richmond. He earned the affection of his students, and the respect of teachers and parents alike.
In his retirement, Jim enjoyed spending quality time with family and friends. He so enjoyed being Papa to his two grandchildren, and travelling the world with Bev. He gave back to his community by serving as Past Presidents of Richmond Rotary, Phi Delta Kappa UBC Chapter, and St. Jude’s Anglican Home. He was honoured to receive Rotary’s highest award, the Paul Harris Fellow.
He was a true gentleman, who always saw the good in others. Humble, patient and kind, Jim’s positive spirit will live in our hearts forever.
We would like to acknowledge and thank the wonderful staff of St. John Hospice, for the gentle and compassionate care they showed Jim and our family. There, we were given a gift of three weeks of time, for family and friends to say goodbye and reminisce of shared memories.
A service will take place on January 25th, 2025 at 1pm at St. John’s (Shaughnessy) Anglican Church, with a reception to follow in the Church’s Trendell Lounge.
In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to St. Jude’s Anglican Home or a charity of your choice.
teacher
James Harvey McPherson, 1939-2024
Come clean, Christy Clark
As a tax-paying British Columbian, I should love Christy Clark. I should. But I don’t.
She is a divisive character in BC politics. She’s not the first, that’s for sure, but you’d think that people would learn. Not “we the people”, but the politicians themselves. Nobody likes a divisive leader. They didn’t when Bill Vander Zalm was around, and they don’t now, so what does Clark think she’s gaining by her divisive style of leadership that Vander Zalm didn’t back in the late 1980s? If she’s gaining anything, it’s only with her cronies in the BC Liberal Party, not with any members of the voting public. Is that really putting “[BC] Families First”?
I’m moved to write about this at this time because of the dispute between theĀ BC Public School Employers’ Association (BCPSEA) and BC’s public teachers. I could point fingers at both sides in this dispute for various reasons, but Clark particularly stands out for rebuke. I say that because no member of the British Columbian public really sees this as a labour dispute between a monolithic employer that doesn’t actually employ any teachers (the BCPSEA) and theĀ BC Teachers’ Federation; it’s Christy and her sidekick of the moment in the education portfolio (Peter Fassbender as of this writing) versus the teachers. It’s an open secret that sealed court proceedings accidentally revealed by the NDP show that the current BC government — strongly led by Clark, so there’s no doubt who is driving this — has a policy to provoke a strike by BC teachers. Imagine! Any thinking leader — especially one with an alleged “Families First” agenda — would not set out to “provoke” anything, never mind the total disruption of the lives of BC’s families!
This won’t be a long post because I really want to get to what I believe is the crux of the matter here. This won’t address issues such as liveable wages in one of the most expensive places to live in the world, and a little thing called inflation. It also won’t address Clark’s contempt of the courts and her preference for fighting and defying their rulings on the legality of her actions dating back over a decade, actions that would get you and I thrown in jail!
Let’s look at Clark’s record with the education system. As Education Minister in the early 2000s she implemented changes that were unpopular with school boards and teachers. While it’s not my contention that popularity is the measure of success, popularity is the basis of democracy. And here we are, over a decade later, and the school boards are still struggling to provide services that are expected by the public and the provincial government on the pittance provided by the latter. Quite frankly, if it wasn’t for the dedication of those people on the ground — teachers, administrators and school board employees — the BC public school system would collapse. With her own child in a private school — a privilege affordable for only 11% (2012 figures) of BC pupils — one really can’t help but wonder if this is actually Clark’s intention.
But enough about that. It’s widely known that Clark’s father was a teacher, and one can reasonably assume that she herself attended at least some school. And here is where I get to the crux of the matter as I see it, and it’s the seldom asked question (at least publicly) on the tips of the tongues of just about anyone I talk to about the war between Clark and the teachers: What formative experience did Clark have — either with her father or one of her own teachers — that seems to put her at perpetual odds with educators? (By “educators” I include more than just teachers.) I’ve heard the term “daddy issues” used often enough to wonder if this premier’s divisive style of leadership — if you can call it “leadership” — is personally-driven rather than based on arguable ideology or coherent policy.
Is it, Christy? Is it time to come clean and excuse yourself from any involvement in the negotiating strategy with the BCTF or, for that matter, any of your government’s education policies that so negatively affect families and the education of their children? Is it time to put your son in a public school — like 89% of your constituents in this province, who feel their children are being used as pawns in a fight between grown-ups who should know better — and suffer with them through this labour strife that you have intentionally provoked?